Japan manufacturing activity rebounded in June on account of increases in output and new orders, results of a survey by Markit Economics and the Japan Materials Management Association (JMMA) revealed Tuesday.
The Markit/JMMA manufacturing purchasing managers’ index increased to 51.5 in June, more than the flash estimate of 51.1, from 49.9 in May. This was the first expansion in three months.
Manufacturing production and new business increased for the first time since March in June. Meanwhile, new export orders declined, though at a slower pace than in the previous month.
Purchasing activity rose for the first time in three months in June.
Input costs increased at a stable pace in June while output prices declined, though at a slower rate than in the previous month.
Growth in staffing levels was slowest since October 2013.
“The implementation of the sales tax in April looks to have had only a temporary effect on Japanese manufacturers.” Amy Brownbill, Economist at Markit, said.
“Shinzo Abe has been trying to address the employment issue by implementing a number of reforms, which many are calling the”third arrow?. The positive effects, however, of these reforms have not been fully felt.”
Published: 2014-07-01 04:08:00 UTC+00
Japan HSBC/Markit PMI Rebounds In June
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